Engineers Without Borders USA (EWB-USA) has announced a challenge competition to develop innovative refrigeration technologies for off-grid households in the developing world.
«As many as 2 billion people live without refrigeration» said Andrew Dowdy one of EWB-USA’s engineers instrumental in developing the challenge, «It’s more than just a convenience, refrigeration can be an essential service, improving the quality of life for millions of people in a number of important ways, but has largely been an unaffordable option, especially for those that live without access to grid power».
The Challenge will provide up to 10 grants between $25,000 to $50,000 for the development of proof of concept prototypes for low-cost refrigerators and community icemakers.
EWB-USA seeks to address the refrigeration gap and push engineers and inventors in their thinking around refrigeration, especially the assumption that off-grid refrigeration will look a lot like on-grid. «It is time to revisit that» said Dowdy, «We need to re-think off-grid refrigeration in two important ways. First, rather than continuing to try to adapt existing refrigerators to the off-grid market, we need to examine other refrigeration technologies to identify ones that may be more appropriate for off-grid customers and conditions. In addition, we need to rethink our definition of refrigeration to include not only household units but also other solutions such as community-sized ice-makers».
While individual household refrigerators may remain a long-term aspirational goal, EWB-USA wants to fill the refrigeration gap for the hundreds of millions of people who are projected to acquire electricity via “mini-grids” or solar home systems.
Cathy Leslie, EWB-USA’s executive director is especially keen on the idea: «Our mission is to lift people out of poverty and reliable, affordable and sustainable refrigeration is a huge step in the right direction. Successful solutions to our refrigeration challenge will be a game-changer for millions of people. We are extremely proud to launch the Chill Challenge, catalyze new thinking, and see new developments. I’m excited».
EWB-USA is proud to have ASHRAE as a Chill Challenge partner, contributing to our expert panel of technical reviewers and providing outreach for the Challenge.
«ASHRAE looks forward to working with EWB-USA in further acknowledging our commitment to advance refrigeration technologies, strategies and practices that will directly impact developing nations» said Darryl K. Boyce, P.Eng., 2019-20 ASHRAE President. «We are optimistic about the opportunity to impact growth and positive change through our common goal of identifying off-grid refrigeration solutions that support the well-being of people around the world».
The international development community also sees refrigeration as an integral tool in lifting people out of poverty. EWB-USA’s engineering team of Dowdy and his colleague Larry Bentley took their “challenge concept” to the XPRIZE Foundation, making it to the semi-finals and drawing the attention and support of the Open Philanthropy Project who subsequently committed $500,000 to EWB-USA to establish the Challenge.
Refrigeration is key to supporting a number of Sustainable Development Goals set out by the United Nations, including health, nutrition, improving economic opportunities and reducing the burden on women by freeing up time spent traveling to the market daily for perishable foods. However, its high power consumption, combined with high off-grid electricity prices makes affordable refrigeration a challenge.
«ASHRAE is proud to partner with EWB-USA on this refrigeration challenge which holds the potential to release economic and social progress to off-grid communities» said Jeff Littleton, executive vice president of ASHRAE. «We hope our partnership will ultimately lead to real-world industry benchmarks which will accelerate the adoption of new and valuable refrigeration technology».
EWB is soliciting applications for the development of prototypes of either a small commercial refrigerator or a community icemaker affordable for off-grid communities. The competition will be open to companies, university teams, or individual inventors worldwide.
«Off-grid refrigeration technology is growing but has yet to enter the marketplace in developing nations in a significant way» says Rajan Rajendran, chair of ASHRAE’s Refrigeration Committee. «We hope that the outcomes and lessons learned from this competition will inspire greater participation and innovation that will ultimately provide communities with expanded access to affordable refrigeration technology that is compatible with off-grid energy sources».
More information on the Challenge can be found HERE
About Engineers Without Borders USA
Engineers Without Borders USA (EWB-USA) is a nonprofit organization that builds a better world through engineering projects that empower communities to meet their basic human needs and equip leaders to solve the world’s most pressing challenges. EWB-USA’s thousands of highly skilled volunteers work on more than 650 projects in partnership with local communities, NGOs, governments and UN agencies in 45 countries to design and implement sustainable and technologically appropriate infrastructure solutions. For more information visit ewb-usa.org and connect on Engineers Without Borders USA on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter.